Foreign firms wary as China launches investment law
BEIJING: Accustomed to unfulfilled promises from the Chinese government, foreign businesses are keeping a wary eye on a nascent law aimed at addressing their long-standing grievances about unfair treatment in the world’s second largest economy.
The foreign investment law, which came into force on January 1, is supposed to give local and foreign companies equal treatment in the Chinese market and improve protections of intellectual property.
But international companies, which have in the past complained about having ‘promise fatigue’, have not been wowed by the legislation.
“Our expectations are quite modest,” said Lester Ross, who heads the policy committee at the American Chamber of Commerce in China.
“The longest-standing issues in China do not concern an absence of legislation, but rather the lack of enforcement and the breadth of government discretion resulting in selective enforcement,” Ross said.
The legislation, which replaces three older laws, says foreign firms are no longer obligated to have a Chinese partner to start a business in the country.
It also prohibits the use of administrative means to force foreign firms to transfer technology to Chinese partners – one of the major sticking points in Beijing’s trade war with the United States.
But a survey of 249 companies, published in December by the British Chamber of Commerce in China, indicated that 38 percent of respondents believed the law would not change anything.
A quarter of respondents did not know what changes to expect.
Beijing passed the law as it faces rising competition for foreign direct investment from other Asian manufacturing hubs, notably in Southeast Asia, said Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific chief economist at IHS Markit. — AFP